ran his eyes up and down. âThis Word, you know what it means?â
I forced a smile and nodded. âI got me an education.â
He sniffed. âNo, Mr. Vonnegan, I do not got an Udug . Neither do you. We have arad .â
I blinked. I knew more than most: Arad meant slave or puppet .
Fallon picked up his glass. âThe crude and uneducated refer to them as Stringers. We havenât seen any in a very long time.â
I walked over to Hiramâs small bar, picked up a decanter of bourbon, and poured myself a drink, waiting for Hiramâs sudden howl of rage, but when I turned back, the fat man was just watching me. I put one hand in my pocket and tried to look smarter than I was.
âHow do you know, Mr. Fallon?â I asked.
Fallon smirked. âI have been too much out of society,â he said, the barest hint of an angular accent in his words. âToo much time spent on custom orders. No one knows me anymore.â
âOur Mr. Fallon is an accomplished Fabricator,â Hiram said, face impassive. â Enustari , soaked in the blood of innocents, far too smart to associate with the likes of us.â
A Fabricator. Building devices imbued with magic or a demonic intelligence. They were rare enough. Finding one to apprentice with was like discovering an oil well in your backyard, and I started plotting. My gasam , the ever-angry and bitterly disappointed Hiram, was here. I might be able to negotiate a transfer of the bond if I could convince Fallon to take me on. Assuming he would be willing to feed and water Mags as a condition.
âYour Master does not like me, Mr. Vonnegan,â Fallon said, not sounding even slightly concerned. âTell me, has he taught you all his thieving tricks, the mu and Cantrips that bring a cascade of tarnished nickels and dimes into his bottomless pockets?â
âIf you ask nicely,â Hiram said heatedly, âMr. Fallon will teach you about murdering people by the thousands for research .â
This was new; Hiram had no compunction about bleeding people. It was true that he generally paid, cajoled, or bullied people into consent before bleeding themâI could still picture the sweaty twenty-dollar bill heâd given the girl, all of fourteen and shivering and terrifiedâbut I wasnât sure it made much difference when you were stealing something irreplaceable from idiots who didnât know better. Because no one outside of our order understood it, there was no way they could give anything resembling consent. If Fallon had crossed some sort of line that Hiram regarded as sacred, we were in wild and unmapped territory.
Mages at Fallonâs level were dangerous. Enustari bled the world for their spells, epic complex rituals that required dozens of people to bleedâor a few people to bleed to death. Enustari and the next level down, saganustari ,engineered disasters and mass suicides, spawned death cults and started wars to harvest the blood. I eyed Fallon: He wore the hell out of the suit and he sat with immense confidence, his hands powerful and deft, a builderâs hands. A Fabricator. But he didnât have any Bleeders, and a mage without Bleedersâwell, it came down to the spells you had memorized, how good you were with the Words.
I had a feeling Fallon was very good with them.
âWhy are you here, Mr. Vonnegan?â Fallon asked, putting those flat, pale eyes on me.
I swallowed. âI need help.â
He nodded. âIndeed. I am here because your gasam , as is his habit, has stolen something that is now required.â
Hiram snorted. â Required ,â he muttered, shaking his head.
Fallon glanced at him, then back at me, and I wished fervently that he would look anywhere else. âYour stupid, boorish gasam , who trades in tricks and trivialities to fuel his base and unremarkable appetitesâthis ridiculous man you chose to be your teacherâdoes not grasp the severity of our